HIV/AIDS

Companies shut down HIV drug discount programmes in middle -income countries

Ma Cho Win, 45, is co-infected with HIV and TB.  Photo:Ron Haviv


ROME – Several pharmaceutical companies have abandoned HIV drug discount programmes in middle-income countries, according to an HIV drug price report released today by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) at the International AIDS Society Conference in Rome.
 
The report "Untangling the Web of ARV Price Reductions: July edition"which analyses the prices of 23 antiretrovirals with information provided by 19 manufacturers – also shows continued trends of price reductions for drugs not blocked by patents.
 
“While there is continued progress to reduce prices for the poorest countries, a significant number of people with HIV/AIDS live in countries that are now excluded from price reductions,” said Nathan Ford, medical director of MSF’s Campaign for Access to affordable medicines. 
 
Tibotec/ Johnson & Johnson exclude all countries classified as ‘middle-income’ from their price reductions; Abbott excludes low-income and lower middle-income countries from discounts for one of its drugs; and ViiV (Pfizer + GlaxoSmithKline) no longer offers reduced prices to middle-income countries, even when programmes are fully funded by the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria or the US-government’s PEPFAR programme.
 
In a reversal, Merck has now announced that it will no longer issue price discounts for 49 middle-income countries for its new drug raltegravir.  This move leaves out countries with large numbers of people living with HIV/AIDS, such as India, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Ukraine, Colombia and Brazil.  Today, Brazil is paying $5,870 per patient per year (ppy) for just this one HIV drug; in least-developed countries, Merck charges $675 ppy for the drug, which is already four times the price of the recommended triple first-line combination (TDF/3TC/EFV).
 
This development comes on the heels of a number of developing countries being excluded from last week’s agreement between drug company Gilead and the new Medicines Patent Pool, which aims to increase access to affordable ARVs by negotiating licencing that can be used by generic manufacturers.  
 
MSF started HIV treatment programmes in Latin America and Asia over ten years ago, but has since handed many of them over to local authorities in the confidence that people would be able to access the treatment they need from government programmes.  People in these countries in particular have been on HIV treatment for a number of years now, and therefore need access to newer drugs – but patents block access to more affordable generics.
 
“Drug company discount programmes have proven not to be a long-term solution,” said Janice Lee, HIV/AIDS pharmacist at MSF’s Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines.  “When patents get in the way and drug companies refuse to cut prices, governments are going to have to start overriding patents so that they can afford to keep their HIV-positive people alive.”
 
‘Compulsory licenses’ issued by Thailand and Brazil for HIV medicines in 2006 and 2007 helped dramatically bring prices down when patents formed a barrier to people’s access.  But despite the fact that these measures are authorized by international trade rules, countries have faced retaliatory measures from pharmaceutical companies and governments.
 
The MSF price report also shows good news. Thanks to continued generic competition, the critical drug tenofovir now costs $76 ppy which is cheaper than the price of zidovudine (AZT) which costs $88 ppy.  This means it is becoming more affordable for countries to shift to using World Health Organization-recommended improved combinations with tenofovir and move away from the drug stavudine (d4T), which has significant long-term side effects.
 
The price of a one-pill-once-a-day combination that contains tenofovir has come down by 70% since the WHO recommended people move to less-toxic treatment five years ago, from US$613 to $173 ppy today. 
 
“We’re seeing drug prices continue to decline when patents do not form a barrier to generic production,” said Janice Lee, pharmacist at MSF’s Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines. 
“These reductions increase the feasibility of reaching the new UN goal of getting 15 million people on treatment by 2015.”
 
MSF provides antiretroviral treatment to 170,000 people in 19 countries.
 
PRESS CONTACT:

Sheila Shettle +1 917 91 30 183
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To download the report,Untangling the Web of Antiretroviral Price Reductions July 2011 edition